Word: asking
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...generate the most immediate beneficial change, and I would hope sincere efforts to that effect would become a more familiar part of the Harvard landscape. But there are also more fundamental changes each of us can make in our ways of thinking and acting. These changes, though they ask for little effort, would serve as the basis for a lasting commitment to end the assaults which so silently plague Harvard and other American universities...
...bottles also give students a chance to get creative with their drinking habits. Some fill their water bottles with iced tea mixes before heading to class. Others, like Dave Sivak '00, carry their Nalgenes to the dining hall to fill with various fruit juices. As Sivak observes, "People usually ask for a sip--people I don't even know. I usually share with them--it's sort of a communal thing. They share their snacks too, so it's kind of like a fun party in class." Sivak says he would never spend money on pre-bottled water now, noting...
...talking in judge's chambers. Lawyers on both sides are haggling with U.S. District Judge Norma Hollaway Johnson over what questions Lindsey has to answer. "It's a dance," says TIME Washington deputy bureau chief J.F.O. McAllister. "The White House people say 'We don't want you to ask him that,' and Starr's side says, 'Well, what if we do?' And then the White House threatens to invoke executive privilege...
...Ask Me No Questions Clinton confidant Bruce Lindsey visits Ken Starr's grand jury, and takes 10 White House lawyers along. Chances are someone will whisper the magic words: Executive privilege...
...Crimson should examine each quotation and ask whether it adds a unique and knowledge perspective. The Crimson should work harder to ensure that reporters and editors inform and enlighten debate with facts, rather than serve as a microphone for campus quotations...